The last 2 generations (Gen Y/Millennials and now Gen Z) have had "special snowflake syndrome". This started to emerge from the participation trophy and self-esteeming boosting culture that started to permeate parenting and K-12 schools in the 1990s.
There are so many men who are invisible to women. There are men who offer more than this poster is offering who are invisible.
Men need to do self-improvement initiatives to just be visible and even have a chance. Having a chance isn't a guarantee of anything.
This is bad for this poster. I have done many approaches in many indoor retail venues and never once been kicked out of a venue.
In order to get kicked out of an indoor retail venue for approaching, a man needs to be very socially uncalibrated.
yup, i'm a broken record on this, and its a reminder that women are the only gender that can get away with being socially uncalibrated, men can never get away with that.
yeah people and society, the world, they never actually say it, but they just naturally expect us guys, men, to have common sense or just instinctively know how to never be creepy or weird, they just expect us to have the social intuition for knowing what is creepy/weird behavior and what is not when interacting with women, and when guys, men, make errors or mistakes when approaching/interacting with women that result in awkward interactions, in which the woman view the guy as creepy or weird, uncomfortable, its painful, embarassing, makes us feel very stupid. I know this is a mindset me and lots of guys, men have, lets say if we guys, men, were to ever actually get better at approaching/interacting with women, get results, it will still forever/permanently hurt, be painful, because of the awkward interactions we had with women that resulted in what i described, however, i've heard some people say that is part of the journey of getting better, or its part the learning process, that either all or most guys go through that when it comes to getting better with women. Is that correct or not?
For me its not rejection, its the way that it happens that has the biggest affect on me, as in, awkward interactions that result in women thinking of me as weird or creepy, uncomfortable, and it makes me and lots of men feel embarassed or ashamed to get help to figure out what they are doing wrong, when plenty of guys it seems naturally know how to learn from their mistakes on their own or just never once in their life had an awkward interaction in which they got thrown the creepy/weird label, never once made a woman uncomfortable, sure yes they have been rejected, but they just never creeped a girl out or never once made her uncomfortable.